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Whistle Stopper - The Very Best of Sheryl Crow

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List Price: $13.98
Our Price: $4.89
Your Save: $ 9.09 ( 65% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: A&M
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0602498611548 Label: A&M Manufacturer: A&M Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: A&M Release Date: 2003-11-04 Studio: A&M
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: excellent Comment: Product arrived quickly, was in excellent condition. I am listening to Chery Crow now and enjoyng every minute of it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Wonderful CD Comment: Of all the music genre, country music is my least favorite yet it took the talented Sheryl Crow to convince me otherwise. It's modern yet appeals to a wide cross-section of age group.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Very Best says it all Comment: This CD is fun and uplifting. Sheryl's throaty voice makes me feel good, especially when she belts out her award winning and, a BIG favorite of mine, "All I Wanna Do."
I find myself singing along with Sheryl without realizing it. Consequently, I play it over and over again.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Awesome CD! Comment: I bought this CD because I'd heard a Sheryl Crow song I liked on the radio. I didn't realize how many songs she had recorded that I liked. I fell in love with several songs! She has so much variety in her voice, and an awesome range. I just bought tickets to her current concert tour.
Customer Rating:      Summary: These boots are made for walkin' Comment: Way back when I was Noisy Papering, I remember, being tasked with reviewing John Mellencamp's Uh-Huh, seeing his liner notes "thank[ing] the Stones for their great records," as if he, puny usurping upstart, was, like, ready to take over for the glimmer geezers, or what. The nerve! At least Bon Jovi acknowledged his sloppy 2nd tier position in the holy pop pantheon, but, seriously, Mellencamp?
Anyway, here's his natural-born 2nd wife or something, Sheryl Crow, whose hottest jukebox spot is, appropriately enough, "Steve McQueen," not Paul Newman mind you, a 3-minute serving of Steve Miller almost sassy enough (check the 2nd verse) for the legendary Miss Britney Spears. Like all of Crow's repertoire, "Steve McQueen" traffics in corporate bohemianism; like, Linda Ronstadt's "Tumbling Dice."
If it makes you happy it can't be that bad, coffee, beers, cigarettes and hit-the-highway spunk, Alice doesn't live here anymore, Loretta Lynn summoned on tidy beams of California Hotel bling. This is waitress revenge music, safe and soft and occasionally irresistible. Calculated grumpiness, overdubbed hangover, show a little midriff, shake some fanny, "never give up" and bait the 'ol dudes.
I'm not the kinda girl you take home.
Did I actually say that???
Prindle, yo!
Plus, "Strong Enough," sorta Stevie Nicks, my ex used to play this all the time at 2am when our marriage was going down the potty.
The nerve!
Now, excuse me, I'm gonna paint my toenails.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Despite the photographic presence of an acoustic guitar (the rock & roll equivalent of a rubber bullet), the enviably lovely hair and the unassuming knitwear, Sheryl Crow is staring back at us from the cover of The Very Best Of with her chin resting on a fist clenched tightly with white-knuckled defiance. This is, after all, the girl whose wishful thinking led her to sing "All I wanna do is have some fun" while privately preferring to either curl up in bed for a very long time or roll over and die (she's recently come out of the closet with regards to her longstanding battles with depression).Yes, she's earned herself an armful of Grammys and has been damned with faint praise, but if you go easy on the relatively troublesome second half of Sheryl Crow's 10-year solo career (the poppy optimism of songs like "C'mon C'mon" and "Soak Up the Sun" seems strained), then this decade-acknowledging resumé serves as a reminder of her narrative talents for summarising the pitfalls of burdensome workloads ("Everyday Is a Winding Road") and problematic squeezes ("My Favorite Mistake") within an MTV-friendly pop framework. --Kevin Maidment
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